Training neural networks

ABSTRACT

A method of training an artificial neural network uses a computer configured as a plurality of interconnected neural units arranged in a layered network including an input layer having a network input, and an output layer having a network output. A neural unit has a first subunit and a second subunit. The first subunit having one or more first inputs, and a corresponding first set of variables for operating upon the first inputs to provide a first output. The first set of variables can change in response to feedback representing differences between desired network outputs for selected network inputs and actual network outputs. The second subunit has a plurality of second inputs, and a corresponding second set of variables for operating upon said second inputs to provide a second output. The second set of variables can change in response to differences between desired network outputs for selected network inputs and actual network outputs. The computer provides an activating variable representing the difference between current second output and previous second outputs. A series of examples of data is provided as network input to said network. The activating variable is added to the feedback to accelerate the change of said first set of variables. The actual resulting network outputs are compared to desired outputs corresponding to the examples. The examples are iterated until the network outputs converge to a solution.

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RELATED COPENDING APPLICATIONS

Ser. No. 284,156, filed concurrently with this for "Trainable Neural Network", is concerned with neural networks having units within real time and predictive variables;

Ser. No. 284,149, filed concurrently with this for "Neural Network Training Tool", is concerned with a method of using a software tool used to generate values for pretraining computers;

Ser. No. 284,148, filed concurrently with this for "Speeding Learning in Neural Networks", is concerned with a method of converging back propagation algorithms;

Ser. No. 284,150, filed concurrently with this for "Adjusting Neural Networks" is concerned with accelerating the timing of neural networks by calculating and accumulating a number of proposed changes to a value matrix during a corresponding number of iterations and applying the accumulated changes to the value matrix.

Ser. No. 284,155, filed concurrently with this for "Accelerating Learning in Neural Networks", is concerned with a method of selecting which variables of a neural network are changed during an iteration;

Ser. No. 284,145, filed concurrently with this for "Fast Neural Network Training, is concerned with enhancing training feedback signals based on confidence during training;

Ser. No. 284,154, filed concurrently herewith for "Neural Networks Learning Method" is concerned with another method of strengthening feedback signals during training based upon the product of a unit's input and outputs; and

Ser. No. 284,152, filed concurrently herewith for "Optimizing Neural Network Solutions" is concerned with a method of avoiding local solutions to problems by introducing a small amount of noise.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention pertains to computer systems and more particularly is concerned with artificial neural networks. Artificial neural networks (also called connections networks) are powerful information processors. One advantage of neural networks is their general applicability to many types of diagnosis and classification problems. Such problems have a wide variety and large number of inputs (i.e., waveforms, spectra, images, and environmental measurements) which must be correlated to produce an output. The concept is based on research over the last 30 years in neurobiology, with efforts to simulate biological neural network functions (such as pattern recognition) in computers.

A neural network includes a plurality of processing elements called neural units arranged in layers, as shown schematically in FIG. 1. Interconnections are made between units of successive layers. A network has an input layer, an output layer, and one or more "hidden" layers in between. The hidden layer is necessary to allow solutions of nonlinear problems. Each unit functions in some ways analogous to a biological neuron; a unit is capable of generating an output signal which is determined by the weighted sum of input signals it receives and a threshold specific to that unit. A unit is provided with inputs (either from outside the network or from other units) and uses these to compute a linear or non-linear output. The unit's output goes either to other units in subsequent layers or to outside the network. The input signals to each unit are weighted either positively or negatively, b factors derived in a learning process.

When the weight and threshold factors have been set to correct levels, a complex stimulus pattern at the input layer successively propagates between hidden layers, to result in a simpler output pattern, such as only one output layer unit having a significantly strong output. The network is "taught" by feeding it a succession of input patterns and corresponding expected output patterns; the network "learns" by measuring the difference (at each output unit) between the expected output pattern and the pattern that it just produced. Having done this, the internal weights and thresholds are modified by a learning algorithm to provide an output pattern which more closely approximates the expected output pattern, while minimizing the error over the spectrum of input patterns. Neural network learning is an iterative process, involving multiple "lessons". Neural networks have the ability to process information in the presence of noisy or incomplete date and yet still generalize to the correct solution.

In contrast, some other approaches to artificial intelligence, i.e., expert systems, use a tree of decision rules to produce the desired outputs. These decision rules, and the tree that the set of rules constitute, must be devised for the particular application. Expert systems are programmed, and generally cannot be trained. Because it is easier to construct examples than to devise rules, a neural network is simpler and faster to apply to new tasks than an expert system.

FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of a neural unit. Physically a unit may be, for example, one of numerous computer processors or a location in a computer memory. Conceptually, a unit works by weighing all of its inputs, subtracting a threshold from the sum of the weighted inputs, resulting in a single output which may be a binary decision, 1 or 0. However, in practice a network has a more stable operation when each unit's output is smoothed, so that a "soft binary decision" in the range of values between 1 and 0 is delivered.

A unit multiplies each of its inputs with a corresponding weight. This process follows the so-called propagation rule and results in a net input which is the weighted sum of all the inputs. The unit's threshold is subtracted from the weighted sum, to provide a so-called linear decision variable. When the linear decision variable is positive (when the weighted sum exceeds the threshold), a binary decision would be 1; otherwise, the binary decision would be 0. The linear decision variable, however, is passed through a nonlinear mapping so that a range of values between binary 1 and 0 is obtained. The resulting nonlinear output is the smoothed decision variable for the unit which provides a more stable operation. An output near either end of the range indicates a high confidence decision.

The nonlinear mapping is an S-shaped curve output function. When the linear decision variable is very negative, the curve is nearly flat, giving values near the lower end of the range (binary 0 decisions with high confidence). When the linear decision variable is very positive, the curve is again nearly flat, giving values near the upper end of the range (binary 1 decisions with high confidence). Changes in the linear decision variable in the flat regions make very little difference in the unit output. When a unit makes a high confidence decision, it is quite insensitive to moderate changes in its inputs. This means the unit is robust. When the linear decision variable is zero, the mapping gives a unit output at the center of the range. This is interpreted as no decision, a low confidence condition in which 1 and 0 are deemed equally likely. This result is obtained when the weighted sum of inputs is equal to the threshold.

FIG. 3 is the curve of the mapping function ##EQU1## wherein the output range is [0,1]; in this case, an output of 1/2 is interpreted as no decision.

Because the linear decision variable is the weighted sum of all inputs to the unit minus the threshold, the threshold can be considered as just another weight. This way of looking at a unit's operation is useful in considering learning algorithms to adjust weights and thresholds, because it allows a unified treatment of the two.

As previously noted, units are connected together to form layered networks (which are also called manifolds). The inputs to units in the first layer are from outside the network; these inputs represent the external data to the network and are called collectively the network input. The outputs from units in the last layer are the binary decisions that the network is supposed to make and are called collectively the network output. All other units in the network are in so-called hidden layers. All inputs to units, except those in the first layer, are outputs of other units. All outputs from units in the first and hidden layers are inputs to other units. Although a unit has only a single output, that output may fan out and serve as an input to many other units, each of which may weigh that input differently.

Because the nonlinear mapping makes the units robust, neural networks are fault tolerant. If a unit fails, its output no longer reaches other units in the network. If those affected units were previously making high confidence decisions, and if this was based on many inputs (i.e., the network has a high degree of connectivity), this change in inputs will have only a small effect on the output. The result is that the damaged network provides almost the same performance as when undamaged. Any further performance degradation is gradual if units progressively fail.

The performance of a neural network depends on the set (matrix) of weights and offsets. Learning algorithms are intended to compute weights and offsets that agree with a set of test cases (lessons), consisting of known inputs and desired outputs. An adjustment pass is performed for each test case in turn, until some adjustment has been made for all of the cases. This entire process is repeated (iterated) until the weights and thresholds converge to a solution, i.e., a set of values with which the network will give high confident outputs for various network inputs.

For each test case, the mean square error between desired and actual output is calculated as a function of the weights and thresholds. This error is a minimum at some point in parameter space. If training were done with one test case alone, the weights and thresholds would converge to a particular set of values. However, any other test case, whether the desired output is the same or different, will have a different error at each point in parameter space. The appropriate learning is achieved by minimizing the average error, where the average is taken over all test cases. This is why it is desirable to make one adjustment for each test case in turn; the sequence of adjustments is very much like an ensemble average over the test cases. The preferred class of techniques to do this is called back propagation.

An example of a known neural network learning algorithm for a single step of back propagation is shown in FIG. 4. In the algorithm, which is written in Pascal language, the index k is the unit number, running from 0 to uc-1. The parameter uc is the unit count. The index numbers mi to uc-1 correspond to the units in the network. The index numbers 0 to mi-1 correspond to the mi external inputs, i.e., the data, to the neural net. The units with these index numbers can be thought of as dummy units: they have a fixed output (which is the neural net input with that index number), and no inputs, no weights, and no threshold. This artifice is used solely for consistency, so that for the purposes of the algorithm all unit inputs, including those of the first layer, are outputs of other units.

The pass in the forward direction, from input layer to output layer, shows how the algorithm produces outputs for each unit. For the unit numbered k, the inputs are summed with appropriate weights (the variable "ws") and an offset (the variable "to," equal to minus the unit's threshold) is added. Note that if this code is to calculate the output of a net with instantaneous propagation, all connections must be made from a unit numbered i to a unit numbered k such that k is greater than i. That is, the connection matrix ws must be strictly upper triangular. Inputs from units with higher number are delayed by one sampling interval.

The variable "on" is the linear decision variable of the unit, the weighted sum of unit inputs offset by minus the threshold. The variable "out" is a nonlinear mapping of "on".

The pass in the backward direction, from output layer to input layer, implements the back propagation algorithm. It utilizes the steepest decent gradient for minimizing the mean square error between network output and desired output. The mean square error is ##EQU2## where the sum is over those units that supply network outputs, and "rf" is the reference output desired. The quantity "pf" (the primary feedback, so called for its role in other learning algorithms) is the partial derivative of this error with respect to "on." (There is an overall factor of -2, which is discussed below.) For those units in the output layer which supply network outputs, the derivative can be calculated directly. For units that supply inputs to other units, the calculation requires repeated application of the chain rule. (The derivation is given, for example, in Learning Internal Representations by Error Propagation, Chapter 8 of Parallel Distributed Processing, Rumelhart, Hinton, and Williams, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1986.) The algorithm allows for the possibility that a unit will provide both an external network output and an input to other units. The factor of out (1-out) is simply the derivative of the particular nonlinear mapping function (logistic activation function) used, i.e., ##EQU3## The final step of the algorithm changes the weights and the thresholds by an amount proportional to the derivative of the error with respect to these quantities. The step size is scaled by the parameter d, which is adjusted empirically. It is possible to make this proportionality constant different for each unit in the network. The factor of -2 mentioned above is absorbed in the constant; the minus sign ensures that the step is in the direction of decreasing error.

The threshold can be considered as just another weight, corresponding to a dummy input that is always +1 for every unit. If this is done, the weights and thresholds can be treated in exactly the same way.

While this algorithm will in time reach a solution, many passes (iterations) are needed. An object of this invention is to provide a neural network which reaches a solution with significantly fewer iterations than required by the prior art.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Briefly, as an aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of training an artificial neural network comprising the steps of:

A computer is configured as a plurality of interconnected neural units arranged in a layered network including an input layer having a network input, and an output layer having a network output. A neural unit has a first subunit and a second subunit. The first subunit having one or more first inputs, and a corresponding first set of variables for operating upon the first inputs to provide a first output. The first set of variables can change in response to feedback representing differences between desired network outputs for selected network inputs and actual network outputs. The second subunit has a plurality of second inputs, and a corresponding second set of variables for operating upon said second inputs to provide a second output. The second set of variables can change in response to differences between desired network outputs for selected network inputs and actual network outputs. The computer provides an activating variable representing the difference between current second output and previous second outputs. A series of examples of data is provided as network input to said network. The activating variable is added to the feedback to accelerate the change of said first set of variables. The actual resulting network outputs are compared to desired outputs corresponding to the examples. The examples are iterated until the network outputs converge to a solution.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of a neural network;

FIG. 2 represents a neural unit, the building block of a neural network;

FIG. 3 shows the curve of a nonlinear mapping function;

FIG. 4 is a listing of a back propagation learning algorithm known to the prior art;

FIGS. 5 and 6 are block diagrams of computers suitable for practicing the invention;

FIG. 7 is a listing of a back propagation learning algorithm which includes strategic prediction;

FIG. 8 is a flow diagram of the algorithm listed in FIG. 7;

FIG. 9 is the curve of a preferred nonlinear mapping function;

FIG. 10 is a pair of neural units each including a predictive subunit;

FIG. 11 illustrates the decreasing effect of strategic prediction as the network output nears a solution;

FIG. 12 represents a simple three layer network which by adjusting variables can function as a logic gate;

FIG. 13 is a listing of the output of the network of FIG. 12 as the internal variables converge to a solution;

FIG. 14 is a plot of selected cases from the listing of FIG. 13;

FIG. 15 is a listing of an enhanced backward propagation lear algorithm; and

FIG. 16 is a flow diagram for the algorithm of FIG. 15.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The preceding background material is incorporated in this detailed description by reference. An understanding of the background material is necessary to comprehend the present invention.

A purpose of the invention is to "teach" neural network, by adjusting weights and offsets (thresholds) to provide optimal solutions to a class of problems.

FIGS. 5 and 6 shows block diagrams of computers programmed to practice the invention. The invention is not limited to the type of computer architecture. The computer may be a conventional von Neuman machine 100, as seen in FIG. 5, or a distributed processor machine 200, as seen in FIG. 6, such as a SUN (TM) Microsystem Unix (TM) Workstation. The computer is programmed with a back propagation learning algorithm which, as a feature of the invention, incorporates a "predictor" function which increases the speed of converging on the solution to a problem during the learning process when internal weights and thresholds of individual neural units are determined.

In a von Neuman computer, units are located in memory. Weight correction ripples through units one unit at a time starting at the output layer. In a parallel processor computer, the weight corrections are made on each unit simultaneously.

A single step of an embodiment of the learning algorithm is listed in Pascal in FIG. 7. The corresponding flow diagram is seen in FIG. 8. The preferred nonlinear mapping function is the hyperbolic tangent which, as seen in FIG. 9, takes all real numbers into the set [-1, +1]; in this case, an output of +1 means a binary 1, while an output of -1 means a binary 0. The factor of (1-out²) is the derivative of tanh x is.

Compared with the known back propagation algorithm of FIG. 4, there are novel features which greatly improved the speed of learning.

Referring to FIG. 10, each unit has two parallel subunits, a real time unit (RU) and a predictive unit (P), each subunit has its own matrix of weights and offsets. In contrast with neural networks having only one link (connection) between each pair of coupled units, the present neural network has a plurality of links between units. In each pass (iteration), two outputs are calculated, "out", and "pd,". The output "pd" is a predicted output for the predictive unit. The output "out" of a real time unit of unit "A" forms the input to the predictive and real time subunits of unit "B" in the subsequent layer. The output of the real time subunit of unit "B" inputs the predictive unit of unit "A" in the previous layer. The difference between the current and previous filtered output, "df", of each predictive unit is directed to its corresponding real time subunit where it is added to the primary feedback "pf" and accelerates the change on the real time matrix.

The predicted output "pd" is passed through a single pole filter to smooth it. The difference in the filtered prediction between the current and previous iterations gives the variable "dt." This variable, called the activation, is used during the learning portion of the algorithm.

The primary feedback "pf" is calculated as in back propagation for units that supply network outputs. However, the change "dt" in the predicted output (the activation) is added to the primary feedback to produce a secondary feedback. This secondary feedback takes the place of the primary feedback in all other places, both in the chain rule calculation of "pf" for other units, and in the adjustment of the weights and offsets (thresholds).

The change for the offset is the same as the change for a weight with an input equal to unity. (Refer briefly to FIG. 12.) The algorithm treats weights and offsets in a unified fashion.

The adjustments for the weights and offsets of the real time and predictive units are analogous. They differ only in the constant of proportionality and their time constants. The predictive weights and offsets have a longer time constant, so they adapt more rapidly to discrepancies between desired and calculated output. This more rapid adaptation will be noisier in many cases, so the aforesaid low pass filtering of the predicted output "pd" is appropriate. Initial weights are low (±1×10⁻⁵) compared with those of conventional back propagation (±0.3).

To review, each unit uses two sets (matrixes) of variables which change at different speeds. The real time matrix contains present weights and offsets (thresholds), in the same manner as does corrected back propagation. The other matrix contains predicative weights and offsets. The predicative matrix represents the history of all previous predictive weights and offsets and tends to filter out noise fluctuations in error signals. Each set of variables operates upon the inputs to the corresponding subunit to provide the output of the subunit.

The predicative matrix provides a strategic prediction based on predicatives which causes acceleration of weight convergence in the real time matrix, due to the addition of "dt" to the primary feedback. As seen in FIG. 11, the effect of strategic prediction falls out as the network gets near a solution (binary 1 or 0) because activator "dt" is smaller. This technique is called "gradient decent optimization".

By incorporating a predictive variable in the learning process, the aforedescribed described learning algorithm reaches a solution with significantly fewer iteratives than previously known back-propagation learning algorithms.

FIG. 12 represents a simple three layer network. By selecting sets of variables, the network can function as various logic gates, such as an exclusive-ORgate, which is non-linear, or an ANDgate, which is linear.

Using previously known back propagation algorithms it takes several hundred passes or iteratives to train the network of FIG. 12 to be an exclusive ORgate. Using the described algorithm, the network converges to a correct solution (0,1,0,1) in less than twenty iterations, as seen by the printout reproduced in FIG. 13.

Another method of speeding convergence of values of neural networks is based on the observation that at stages of iteration of back propagation algorithms, both previously known and disclosed herein, there is a particular oscillation of the output of the network, as can be seen in FIG. 13. The signs of the network output converge first, as seen at pass 13, before the magnitudes of network output do. As an additional feature of the invention, there is provided a multiplication of weights and offsets after output sign convergence is observed at the network output. This technique is called "boost".

Suppose that a set of weights and offsets has been found that gives outputs with the correct sign for all test cases. That is, the network has learned to make correct decision for all test cases, though the decisions may have quite low confidence associated with them (that is, the outputs may not be near either binary one or zero). If the network were linear, than a rescaling of all weights and offsets would produce a proportional change in the outputs. Thus, increasing weights and offsets by some constant factor would increase the quality of the decisions. Since the network is usually highly nonlinear, this holds true only for those outputs near the linear region; this region is near zero, where the decisions are of low quality. If, on the other hand, all of the network outputs were of high quality (near the limits of their range), then a proportional increase in all weights and offsets would have a negligible effect on the outputs. This is because the S-shaped nonlinear mapping, as seen in FIG. 9, is very flat in those regions and so insensitive to such changes. This means that such a proportional increase will not degrade performance when the learning algorithm has nearly converged. On the contrary, a proportional increase in weights and offsets greatly improves the quality of most outputs, as seen in FIG. 14. Further iterations of the gradient learning algorithms can restore the quality of any remaining outputs that are degraded by the boost.

The real time sets of values for weights and thresholds obtained for a trained neural network may be transcribed directly into one or more descendant networks. Such a descendant network does not have to go through the learning process experienced by the trained parent network. The sets of weights and thresholds may be fixed in the descendant network as constants, in which case there is no need for a learning algorithm. The descendant network does not have to be identical to the parent network, but when trained is functionally equivalent to in forward pass (input to output). Physically, constant weights can be resistor values coupling distributed amplifiers in an analog computer system or located in ROM for a digital computer system. Alternatively, a descendant network may be adaptive, in which case the transcribed values are changeable and used as a baseline for subsequent modification by a learning algorithm.

Additional features can be added to enhance the algorithm listed in FIG. 7. The program for a single step of an enhanced learning algorithm is listed in Pascal in FIG. 15. The corresponding flow diagram is seen in FIG. 16. One additional feature in the enhanced algorithm is that the difference "dt" (the activation) is not the change in the predicted output if the weight dl is less than unity. The purpose is to make the activation change sign if the predicted output does not continue to increase. As the activation "dt" is not necessarily zero at convergence, and equilibrium point may be shifted.

Another feature changes the weight d₆ with which primary feedback "pf" contributes to the secondary feedback "sf". This is equivalent to changing the time constants d₄ and d₆ in adjusting weights and offsets, and making a compensating change in the time constant d₀ for the predicted output.

Another feature is the addition of Gaussian white noise to the linear decision variables of both the real time and the predictive unit. The same noise (1×10⁻¹²) is added to both units. The purpose of the noise is to include a small randomization factor to help keep the learning algorithm from being trapped in local solution space minima that are not global minima.

Another feature found in the enhanced learning algorithm is that the adjustments to the real time weights and the predictive weights are done differently in addition to having different time constants. The adjustment for predictive weights "vs" replaces the variable "out," the input to which the weight corresponds, with a filtered variable "p." The analogous adjustment to the offset is the same as with the enhanced learning algorithm, because the corresponding input is the constant unity, which need not be filtered.

The changes to the learning algorithm for adjusting the ordinary weights "ws" are more extensive. The product of one input to a unit and the unit's output is called the eligibility factor for the corresponding weights. It is large when high confidence inputs contribute to high confidence outputs. This eligibility factor is filtered, and the result "e" is used in place of "out" in adjusting the real time weights. When forming "et," which is used to adjust offsets, only the output is filtered. This is because the corresponding input is a dummy input that is constantly unity. (Note that the averages "p" and "et," though logically distinct, differ only in the time constants used to average them.)

In ordinary back propagation, as described in the Background, the adjustment to the variables is proportional to both the primary feedback to the unit and the appropriate input to the unit. In the present learning algorithms, the primary feedback is replaced by secondary feedback. As yet another feature, the adjustment to the feedback may also be proportional to the output from the unit. Those units having an output near binary 1 or 0 will have a larger feedback than outputs midway between. This means that units with little effect elsewhere in the network have correspondingly smaller adjustments.

A further method of updating of weights and offsets is applicable to a neural network using any back propagation learning algorithm. The method consists in accumulating in accumulators proposed changes to the weights and offsets as calculated by the learning algorithm, without changing their values, over some number of iterations during learning. When the predetermined number of iterations is reached, the accumulated changes are added to the current values of weights and offsets, and the accumulators reset to zero.

According to another feature, called eligibility trace. The changes in a unit's weights thresholds are monitored during iterations. Values which are changed are identified. Only those values changed in a previous iteration are subject to the algorithm and thus to change in subsequent iterations.

The best mode of the invention has been described. With these teachings, equivalent alternatives will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly the scope of the invention should be determined by the claims and equivalents thereof. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method of training an artificial neural network comprising the steps of:(a) providing a computer configured as a plurality of interconnected neural units arranged in a layered network including an input layer having a network input, and an output layer having a network output; at least one of said neural units having a first subunit and a second subunit, said first subunit having one or more first inputs, and a corresponding first set of variables for operating upon said first inputs to provide a first output, said first set of variables changeable in response to feedback representing differences between desired network outputs for selected network inputs and actual network outputs; said second subunit having a plurality of second inputs, and a corresponding second set of variables for operating upon said second inputs to provide a second output, said second set of variables changeable in response to differences between desired network outputs for selected network inputs and actual network outputs, and means for providing an activating variable representing the difference between current second output and previous second outputs; (b) providing a series of examples of data as network input to said network; (c) adding said activating variable to said feedback to accelerate the change of said first set of variables; (d) comparing the actual resulting network outputs to desired outputs corresponding to said examples; and (e) iterating said examples until said network outputs converge to a solution.
 2. The method of claim 1 wherein said first set of variables has a first time constant, said second set of variables has a second time constant longer than said first time constant. 